Current Investigations into the Etiology and Pathogenesis of Neoplasms in California Sea Lions (Zalophus californianus)
Abstract
Neoplastic diseases in free ranging populations of marine mammals were once considered to be rare. However, reports of tumors in marine
mammals are increasing and in a 1983 survey of 1500 marine mammal necropsies, neoplastic lesions were found in 2.5% of animals5. Furthermore, a
population of Beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) in a polluted section of the St. Lawrence River had a tumor incidence of 50%2. Reports of
neoplasms in California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) are also becoming increasingly frequent. Ongoing collaborative investigations at the University
of California, Davis and The Marine Mammal Center have documented a variety of neoplasms in stranded California sea lions and current investigations are focused
on determining the cause of these neoplasms.
From 1979 to 1994, neoplasms were diagnosed in 19% of California sea lions necropsied at TMMC and UCD. The most prevalent of these neoplasms
was a highly anaplastic, aggressive carcinoma presumed to be of urogenital epithelial origin. These anaplastic tumors metastasized early to regional lymph nodes,
pelvic viscera and lungs. The primary tumor was either not identified or was smaller than the metastatic foci2.
Additionally, a variety of other tumors were observed including two sarcomas, a thoracic adenocarcinoma (of uncertain cell origin), a renal
fibroma, an islet cell adenoma and an adrenocortical adenoma. Since the publication of this study, additional urogenital carcinomas have been identified in
California sea lions as well as several benign tumors including 2 uterine leiomyomas, one islet cell tumor of the pancreas, and one teratoma of the perirenal
tissues. A multicentric T-cell lymphoma and an intrathoracic squamous cell carcinoma were also diagnosed. As with the urogenital tumors, the squamous cell
carcinoma was highly aggressive and the primary site was not evident.
The reasons for this apparent predisposition for aggressive neoplasms in the California sea lion are not clear. The number of reported cases
could, in part, be due to over representation of the sea lions at stranding centers. However, in a survey of sea lions dying of acute domoic acid toxicity, small
urogenital tumors with nodal metastases were detected in 5.7% of the animals. The finding of additional incidental benign tumors brought the incidence of
neoplasia to 13.7% in this group. This suggests that the occurrence of neoplasia in sea lions may be high in the general as well as the stranded population.
The prevalence of urogenital neoplasms in California sea lions suggests that environmental factors may play a role in tumorigenesis. In other
species the development of transitional cell carcinomas is closely related to exposure to environmental toxins often with viruses as cofactors7.
Therefore, since 1993, our investigations into the etiology of the sea lion tumors have been focusing on environmental contaminants such as polychlorinated
biphenols (PCBs)4 and viruses, especially herpesviruses. Work on herpesviruses as a co-factor was initiated in 1992 when a 1 cm diameter raised plaque
was detected as an incidental finding on the penis of an adult male sea lion8. Histologically the plaque was characterized by marked acanthosis and
hyperkeratosis of the squamous epithelium with ballooning degeneration of the keratinocytes, many of which contained large amphophilic to basophilic, foamy
intranuclear inclusion bodies. Transmission electron microscopy demonstrated icosahedral, non-enveloped virions with size and morphology compatible with
herpesviruses in the nuclei. Probable gamma herpesvirus sequences were detected by polymerase chain reaction8. Herpesviral inclusions have also been
detected in a small number of urogenital tumors examined at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology.
Herpesviruses have been implicated in epithelial tumors in a wide range of species. These include: papillomas and carcinomas in rainbow smelt
(Osmerus mordax)10, papillomas in green lizard (Lecerta viridis)11, fibropapillomatosis in green sea turtles (Chelonia
mydas)3, foot warts in cockatoos and macaws (Cacatua and Ara spp.)9, and cutaneous papillomas in African elephants
(Loxodonta africana)6. In humans, there is also evidence that herpesviruses may play a role in the development of a variety of epithelial
tumors. Epstein Barr virus (EBV) has been implicated in the development of nasopharyngeal carcinomas and EBV genomic sequences have been detected in invasive
human cervical carcinomas1. Furthermore, some epidemiologic studies suggest that herpes simplex 2 virus (HSV-2) may interact with human papilloma virus
(HPV) and potentiate development of cervical carcinomas. In a 1996 study cytomegalovirus, EBV, and HSV-2 sequences were detected in 11%, 34% and 9% of human
bladder cancers respectively1. Thus, the development of carcinomas in the urogenital epithelium in California sea lions may well be related to
infection by a transforming herpesvirus.
Ongoing collaborative investigations between the University of California, Davis and The Marine Mammal Center are underway to elucidate the
histogenesis of the urogenital carcinomas, determine the role of herpesviruses in the development of urogenital carcinomas and other tumors of sea lions, describe
the molecular events associated with carcinogenesis and determine molecular factors that may predispose sea lion tumors to early metastasis.
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